Alan Greenspan’s book The Age of Turbulence raised many interesting issues, one of them was about the behavior patterns on how people adapt to new technology. The formal Fed Chairman asked: Remember the time when answering the telephone was the most urgent thing for you when telephone was just invented? Then when the initial “honeymoon” ended, people began to screen calls and ask to be put on on no-call list.I do not remember that time, but I do recall I used to answer strangers’ emails when email was new. I recall also conversing with a Turkish guy on skype when that was new. Now, like anybody else, I am agitated when spam was not blocked, and only close friends are on my skype contact list. The author concluded: the initial “special treatment” a new technology gets from people is always short-lived. People quickly turn to a more rational way to make a technology serve our human needs.We are seeing today how media is adjusting to new technologies. With many media outlets begin running videos and podcasts on their websites, print journalists are becoming anchors and broadcasters, sometimes to comical effects. If you have seen someone appearing on television for the first time, you know what I mean. Convergence of the media will take place on its platforms and also its practitioners. Wall Street Journal will run print (soon a misnomer), audio and video, the same as CNBC will have all forms of information transmission. And they will hire appropriate professionals for each category.For now, it remains a golden age for print journalists who may want to upgrade to TV reporters (soon a misnomer too).